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Posted: 6:37 p.m. Monday, April 1, 2013
By Jamie Dupree
While the Obama Administration has been very aggressive in publicly detailing what could happen to various arms of the federal government under automatic budget cuts, it still isn't clear how the sequester will impact those in the West Wing of the White House.
And the White House isn't filling in the blanks when it comes to the Executive Office of the President.
That led to another round of questions at Monday's press briefing for reporters on how the cuts would hit the White House - here between scribes and Press Secretary Jay Carney.
One point of contention is that the White House has been very specific about the number of furlough notices going out to the Office of Management and Budget - 480 - but won't say anything about cuts for those who much more directly work for the President.
"You know exactly what I’m asking," one reporter said to Carney during this exchange.
"You're not identifying anybody who is working directly in the White House."
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Q And to follow up, sequestration impact in the Executive Office of the President -- can you give us some data?
MR. CARNEY: Let me see what I have for you here. As you know, the White House is one of 11 components of the Executive Office of the President, which is, indeed, as we have said, subject to the sequester. Within the Executive Office of the President, several offices have sent furlough notices to their staff, including to 480 employees of the Office of Management and Budget. In addition, EOP leadership has managed our personnel costs in a variety of ways, including hiring slowdowns and delayed backfilling of open positions. And as the impact of the sequester progresses, furlough and pay cuts remain possibilities -- or additional furloughs, as well as pay cuts, remain possibilities for additional White House employees.
Additionally, in order to meet the effects of the sequester, many components of the EOP have significantly scaled back equipment purchases and supply purchases, curtailed staff travel, reduced the use of air cards. And they are reviewing contracts that they have on an ongoing basis to identify opportunities to reduce costs, improve efficiencies without undermining their core mission.
It just means that all -- everybody at the White House and the broader EOP is dealing with the consequences both -- in many cases, in their own personal lives, but in how we work here at the White House, which is true across the federal government because of the impact of the sequester.
Q Just to follow up, because you can be so specific about the OMB impact, and we assume that federal employees get a 30-day notice if they are going to get a furlough notice, and the fact that you’re not identifying anybody who is working directly in the White House for the President as being identified to that, is that --
MR. CARNEY: The OMB works for the President. It is part of the Executive Office of the President.
Q Yes, but we’re talking about -- I’m talking about the West Wing folks who work directly for the President. Those folks --
MR. CARNEY: Again, I just -- I completely take issue with the idea that the OMB doesn't --
Q There are many hundreds of people who work for the President of the United States -- you know what I’m asking you. So my question is, because you haven’t identified those people who have received any furlough notices, you’re saying that cost-effective shifting of dollars and holding down on dollars is for the time being going to prevent anybody from being furloughed? That's what you’re saying?
MR. CARNEY: I think I just said that within the Executive Office of the President, a component of that, OMB, there have been 480 employees who have been notified of furloughs.
Q Right, but you don't work for OMB. So --
MR. CARNEY: No, but they work for the President, and so do I.
Q Yes.
MR. CARNEY: I’m not sure --
Q You know exactly what I’m asking.
MR. CARNEY: I don't. I don't.
Q I’m asking -- okay, the White House --
Q Are those the only furlough notices or are there others?
MR. CARNEY: I have no other notices to announce to you. I can tell you that --
Q Why not?
MR. CARNEY: As I just said, as the impact of the sequester progresses, furlough and pay cuts remain possibilities for additional White House employees. I think you would find at agency after agency, as they make these assessments and make these budget decisions on a rolling basis, they're having to make decisions about furlough notices and other measures that they have to take, and that is as true here as it is in other federal agencies.
Q Well, why can OMB give us a number of 480 and none of the other components --
MR. CARNEY: I’m saying that that's the number I have for EOP, and it’s 480 at OMB.
Q So the other 10 components, there is no furlough notices at this point?
MR. CARNEY: Again, that's what I have for you, Donovan. I don't have any other furlough notices to announce to you.
Q So there haven’t been any?
MR. CARNEY: That's what I have, not beyond what I can tell you. That's what I know.
Jamie Dupree is the Radio News Director of the Washington Bureau of the Cox Media Group and writes the Washington Insider blog.
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